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You Won’t Believe What Country Will Overtake China in Population

By STEPHEN GREEN 

 

The depopulation bomb imploding in China is more powerful than ever according to shocking new figures just published by Australia’s Victoria University in Melbourne.

It just seems like last month [It was just last month, Steve — editor] that I reported for you that Chinese women seemed to be voting against strongman Xi Jinping’s return to True Communismℱ with the only means available to them — their uteri. Live births were down in 2023 by another 500,000 under 2022’s dismal figure. That puts the People’s Republic fertility rate nearly at 1.0, or about half of the 2.1 required just to keep the population from shrinking.

Unchanged, as I’m sure you’ve already figured out in your head, each generation in China will be about half the size of the preceding generation. What that means down the road shocked even me, and I’ve been following this story for years.

“Our forecasts for 2022 and 2023 were already low but the real situation has turned out to be worse,” said Victoria University senior research fellow Xiujian Peng. His research, along with that of China’s Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, indicates that China’s population will shrink to 525 million people by the end of the century.

That’s barely more than a third of today’s population of over 1.4 billion. That also assumed that China’s fertility rate continues to hover at about one birth per woman of childbearing age. Practically next door, in South Korea, the fertility rate has dropped even lower, to 0.78.

One reason for the sharp decline is that China is running short of women of childbearing age, with “more than three million fewer than a year earlier,” according to the WSJ. That’s a problem with no easy fix and certainly no short- or even medium-term solution. Making a woman of childbearing age takes roughly 16 years, and that’s assuming you have a woman of childbearing age willing to put in the work — three times to make up for losses.

“Young women are now at the core of China’s demographic dilemma,” Liyan Qi reported for the WSJ [linked above]. “They are increasingly reluctant to have children—and there are fewer of them every year.”

The shortage of young women is partly a creation of China’s One Child policy, which incentivized couples to abort girl babies in favor of preferred males…

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (pjmedia.com)

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